Beyond Reason by Kat Martin - Book Tour + Giveaway
Beyond Reason
by
Kat Martin
Kat Martin
Genre:
Suspense, Thriller
Suspense, Thriller
New York Times bestselling author Kat Martin raises chills as danger stalks a woman determined
to make it in a man’s world . . .
to make it in a man’s world . . .
Five weeks ago Carly Drake stood at her grandfather’s grave. Now she’s
burying Drake Trucking’s top driver, and the cops have no leads on
the hijacking or murder. Faced with bankruptcy, phone threats and the
fear of failure, Carly has to team up with the last man she wants to
owe—Lincoln Cain.
burying Drake Trucking’s top driver, and the cops have no leads on
the hijacking or murder. Faced with bankruptcy, phone threats and the
fear of failure, Carly has to team up with the last man she wants to
owe—Lincoln Cain.
Cain is magnetic, powerful, controlling—and hiding more than one secret.
He promised Carly’s granddad he’d protect her. The old man took a
chance on him when he was nothing but a kid with a record, and now
he’s the multi-millionaire owner of a rival firm.
But Linc’s money can’t protect Carly from the men who’ll do
anything to shut her down, or the secrets behind Drake Trucking. If
she won’t sell out, the only way to keep her safe is to keep her
close . . . and fight like hell.
The clerk
walked up to the counter, gray-haired and slightly bent. Daisy Johnson had worked at the sheriff’s
office since Linc was a kid.
“Well, if it
ain’t Lincoln Cain,” she said. “I saw in
the paper a few years back you’d bought the old Blackland Ranch, but last I
heard, you were stayin’ out of trouble.”
Linc
grinned. The old woman was a
pistol. “I do my best, Miss Daisy.” He turned.
“This is Carly Drake, Joe Drake’s granddaughter.”
“Hello,
Daisy,” Carly said. “It’s nice to meet
you.”
“You,
too. Your granddaddy was a real good
man.”
“Thank
you. Yes, he was.”
“We need to
talk to the sheriff about the Hernandez murder,” Linc said.
Daisy’s face
wrinkled into a frown. “Bad business,
that. I’ll tell Sheriff Howler you’re
here.”
The shuffle of
boots drew their attention. “No need,
Daisy--I got eyes.” Howler ambled out of
his office, tipped up his chin as a signal to Linc. “You want to talk, you and the little lady
come on back.”
Linc caught
the stiffness that crept into Carly’s shoulders. Looked like Joe’s granddaughter was going to
get along with the sheriff about as well as Linc and her grandpa had. If they weren’t there to find a killer, he
might have smiled.
They followed
Howler into his office and he sat down in the chair behind his desk. “What can I do for you?”
Carly spoke
up. “I want to know what you’re doing to
find the men who murdered Miguel Hernandez.”
Howler leaned
forward across his desk. “Don’t get
yourself in a fret. We’re gonna find
‘em. Just takes time. This ain’t San Francisco, little lady.” He flashed Cain a sneer. “It ain’t Dallas, neither. Our deputies have been out there asking
questions, following up leads. But
nobody saw nothin’ and there ain’t no sign of the truck.”
“What about
the crime scene?” Linc asked. “Surely
some kind of forensic evidence turned up where the body was found.”
Howler shook
his head. “Just because you spent time
behind bars, don’t make you an expert on the law.”
Linc ignored a
shot of irritation. He and Howler had a
history and it wasn’t a good one. His
gaze went to Carly. No surprise in those
big blue eyes. Clearly, she had done her
homework before he’d shown up for yesterday’s meeting. She knew he’d been in prison but instead of
disapproval, she was glaring at the sheriff.
“There’s no
need for you to be rude, Sheriff Howler.
Mr. Cain asked you a question that deserves an answer. I’d like to hear it myself.”
Howler
grunted. “Truth is, we didn’t find much
of anything. The morning Hernandez’s
body was discovered, it had rained off and on during the night. Any DNA evidence was washed away.”
Linc thought
of the detective he had hired. He wanted
answers. He didn’t figure he’d get them
from Howler and so far he was right.
“Who found
him?” Carly asked.
“Man and his
wife driving back to Dallas from a visit to their folks in Texarkana. They’d pulled off to the side of the road to
let their dog out to take a leak. Dog
must have scented the body on the other side of the road. Hernandez had been dead a while by then.”
Carly glanced
away.
“What’s the
coroner give for time of death?” Linc asked.
“Between
eleven and one a.m. You can talk to Doc
Bradshaw yourself if you’d like.”
“Consuelo said
she got a phone call from Miguel about eleven,” Carly said. “He was fueling up at a truck stop a few
miles south of Dallas. He told her he’d
be home a little after midnight.”
“Seventy miles
to Iron Springs from Dallas,” Linc said.
“No traffic that time of night.
Looks like the coroner got it right.”
The sheriff
picked up a pen on his desk and began to click it open and closed. “I know you want those bastards caught and so
do I. But standing here jawing about it
ain’t gonna help. I need to get back to
work.”
Carly ignored
him. “From the start, you’ve assumed
there was more than one hijacker. Why is
that?”
“Found traces
of where a vehicle had been parked in front of the body. We think Hernandez pulled over to the side of
the road behind the car, someone pretending to have engine trouble. He got out and walked up to the vehicle. Whoever it was, shot him, stole the truck and
drove away. Since the car was gone, too,
someone else had to have been driving it.”
“I’d like to
take a look at the reports,” Linc said. “Coroner’s, deputies’, any statements
that were taken, everything you’ve got.”
The sheriff
came out of his chair. “That ain’t gonna
happen. You got no business in this and
that’s the way it’s gonna stay.”
Linc clenched
his teeth to keep from saying something he’d regret.
Carly walked
up to the desk, leaned over and got right in Howler’s face. “Miguel Hernandez worked for me,
Sheriff. That makes his death my
business. I want to see those reports.”
The sheriff’s
jaw went tight. “Now listen here, little
lady--“
“My name is
Carly or you can call me Ms. Drake.”
Those big blue eyes were spitting fire.
Linc could almost see Joe’s blood pumping through her veins.
“If you don’t
want more trouble than you’ve already got,” she said, “you’ll let me see those
files.”
Howler’s face
went beet red. “All right, fine. As a courtesy--and so you’re satisfied there
ain’t nothing there--I’ll let you see what’s in the files.”
“I can pick
the information up or you can drop it off at my office whenever it’s
ready. Just call and let me know.” Carly turned and started walking. “Have a good day, Sheriff.”
They crossed
the office together. Linc opened the
door, then followed her out of the building, over to her truck.
“I know you
want answers,” he said. “So do I. But murder can be a dangerous business. Be better if you didn’t get involved.”
“I don’t trust
Howler to do the job.”
“Neither do
I. Which is why I’ve hired a private
investigator to look into the case. His
name’s Ross Townsend. He’s worked for me
before so I know he’s good.”
“Has he found
anything yet?”
“Not yet, but
he’s just getting started. Call me when
you get those files. Look them over,
then I’ll take a look. Maybe one of us
will see something the sheriff missed.”
“All
right. But in exchange I expect you to
tell me what your investigator finds out.”
Linc shook his
head. “Like I said, Carly, you need to
stay out of this.”
She cocked a
hand on her hip and looked up at him.
“By now you must realize that isn’t going to happen.”
Irritation
warred with amusement. Amusement won
out. “Yeah, I guess I do.” Another of Joe’s traits--she was just as
bullheaded. Joe wouldn’t want her
involved, but the determined set of her jaw said even Joe wouldn’t have been
able to stop her.
Linc jerked
open her pickup door and Carly climbed in behind the wheel.
The engine
started. He watched the pickup pull onto
the road, heading back to Drake Trucking.
He checked his watch. Forty-five
minutes till his conference call on the tire re-building plant he was trying to
open just east of Pleasant Hill. He
didn’t have time to think of Carly Drake and he didn’t want to.
He couldn’t
deny he was attracted to her, all that sexy blond hair and a body that made a
man want to strip her down and take her a dozen different ways.
He knew why Joe
had never mentioned him to her over the years.
He’d been a hell-raiser even after prison. Nothing illegal by then, but he’d liked to
party and he’d liked beautiful women.
And he’d had plenty of them.
Still did.
Joe had wanted
someone special for Carly. He hadn’t
wanted an ex-con taking advantage of his granddaughter.
But things
were different now. Joe had trusted Linc
with Carly’s welfare and that meant keeping her safe.
Even from him.
Kat Martin is the New York Times
bestselling author of sixty-five books across multiple genres.
Sixteen million copies are in print and she has been published in
twenty-one foreign countries, including Japan, France, Argentina,
Greece, China, and Spain. Her books have been nominated for the
prestigious RITA award and won both the Lifetime Achievement and
Reviewer’s Choice Awards from RT Book Reviews.
bestselling author of sixty-five books across multiple genres.
Sixteen million copies are in print and she has been published in
twenty-one foreign countries, including Japan, France, Argentina,
Greece, China, and Spain. Her books have been nominated for the
prestigious RITA award and won both the Lifetime Achievement and
Reviewer’s Choice Awards from RT Book Reviews.
A resident of Missoula, Montana, Kat is
a graduate of the University of California at Santa Barbara, where
she majored in Anthropology and also studied History. She and her
author husband, L.J. Martin, spend their winters in Ventura,
California. She is currently writing her next Romantic Suspense.
a graduate of the University of California at Santa Barbara, where
she majored in Anthropology and also studied History. She and her
author husband, L.J. Martin, spend their winters in Ventura,
California. She is currently writing her next Romantic Suspense.
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